The Decade in Relationships
From the racism of online dating to mourning through technology, here are the relationship conversations that helped define Canada
Read MoreFact-based journalism that sparks the Canadian conversation
From the racism of online dating to mourning through technology, here are the relationship conversations that helped define Canada
Read MoreFrom foot fetishes to the perils of poetic success this is the fiction that helped define Canada
Read MoreFrom surveillance capitalism to Russian hacking, these are the science and tech conversations that helped define Canada
Read MoreFrom Canada’s farming crisis to our love of Kraft Dinner, here are the ideas, people, and conversations that helped define Canada
Read MoreFrom building a life without kids to why shared work offices are the worst, these are the conversations that helped define Canada
Read MoreThe Walrus asked contributors and staff to pick their favourite titles of the past ten years
Read MoreFrom the famous to the infamous, these are the personalities that helped define Canada
Read MoreFrom natural disasters and extreme weather to the last tree left standing in a forest, these are the environment conversations that helped define Canada
Read MoreFrom Vancouver’s unaffordable housing to millennials planning for early retirement, these are the money conversations that defined Canada
Read MoreFrom predicting civil war in the US to evaluating the health of our own democracy, these are the politics conversations that helped define Canada
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Those who hold power are turning their backs on the facts. Meta just announced the defunding of its fact-checking program, Canadian politicians are making calls to defund the CBC, and the incoming American president has embraced misinformation. This means finding facts is going to get a lot harder.
But getting facts should be a universal right, and The Walrus needs your help now more than ever to make that possible. At The Walrus, we check every single fact in our stories so that you can have paywall-free access to the most trustworthy, accurate reporting on our site, every single day. But facts aren’t free. That’s why we need your help. If you are able, support The Walrus with a donation to help ensure we can always bring you the facts.
Those who hold power are turning their backs on the facts. Meta just announced the defunding of its fact-checking program, Canadian politicians are making calls to defund the CBC, and the incoming American president has embraced misinformation. This means finding facts is going to get a lot harder.
But getting facts should be a universal right, and The Walrus needs your help now more than ever to make that possible. At The Walrus, we check every single fact in our stories so that you can have paywall-free access to the most trustworthy, accurate reporting on our site, every single day. But facts aren’t free. That’s why we need your help. If you are able, support The Walrus with a donation to help ensure we can always bring you the facts.